First Epistle of Peter in Smiths Bible Dictionary
The external evidence of authenticity of this epistle is of
the strongest kind and the internal is equally strong. It
was addressed to the churches of Asia Minor which had for
the most part been founded by Paul and his companions,
Supposing it to have been written at Babylon, 1Pe 5:13 it ia
a probable conjecture that Silvanus, By whom it was
transmitted to those churches, had joined Peter after a tour
of visitation, and that his account of the condition of the
Christians in those districts determined the apostle to
write the epistle. (On the question of this epistle having
been written at Babylon commentators differ. "Some refer it
to the famous Babylon in Asia, which after its destruction
was still inhabited by a Jewish colony; others refer it to
Babylon in Egypt, now called Old Cairo; still others
understand it mystically of heathen Rome, in which sense
'Babylon' is certainly used in the Apocalypse of John." --
Schaff.) The objects of the epistle were --
1. To comfort and strengthen the Christians in a
season of severe trial.
2. To enforce the practical and spiritual duties
involved in their calling
3. To warn them against special temptations attached
to their position.
4. To remove all doubt as to the soundness and
completeness of the religious system which they had already
received. Such an attestation was especially needed by the
Hebrew Christians, who were to appeal from Paul's authority
to that of the elder apostles, and above all to that of
Peter. The last, which is perhaps the very principal object,
is kept in view throughout the epistle, and is distinctly
stated 1Pe 5:12 The harmony of such teaching with that of
Paul is sufficiently obvious. Peter belongs to the school,
or to speak more correctly, is the leader of the school,
which at once vindicates the unity of the law and the
gospel, and puts the superiority of the latter on its true
basis-that of spiritual development. The date of this
epistle is uncertain, but Alford believes it to have been
written between A.D. 63 and 67.
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